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Godfather Kriss-Edge Stiletto Switchblade - Ivory

Price:

16.99


Godfather-Style Kriss-Wave Stiletto Switchblade - Midnight Black
Godfather-Style Kriss-Wave Stiletto Switchblade - Midnight Black
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Stealth Compliance California-Legal Automatic Knife - Midnight Black
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Cardroom Classic Kriss-Edge Italian Stiletto - Polished Ivory

https://www.texasotfknives.com/web/image/product.template/1804/image_1920?unique=ff033d5

15 sold in last 24 hours

Late night on a dim West Texas main street, this Italian-style stiletto rides flat in your pocket or glove box. One push of the button and the kriss-edge blade snaps out clean, 3.25 inches of polished steel framed by ivory scales and bright bolsters. It’s not a fence-cutting ranch tool; it’s the quiet, legal automatic you keep close when the night runs long and you like your gear with a little old-world style.

16.99 16.99 USD 16.99

GF6KIV

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When an Italian Stiletto Finds a Texas Night

Picture a two-lane town somewhere between Abilene and San Angelo. Neon beer signs, a narrow sidewalk, a row of trucks nose-in to the curb. In your pocket rides a slim, ivory-handled stiletto, more at home in an old Italian film than a Texas parking lot, but it fits the scene just fine. Thumb settles on the button. You know the snap you’ll get if you need it.

This isn’t a mesquite-chopping ranch knife. It’s a cardroom piece. A bar-back cutter. The kind of automatic you keep in the console or jacket pocket for the smaller chores that show up after dark in this state.

Texas OTF Knife Buyers and the Appeal of a Classic Switchblade

Most folks hunting an OTF knife in Texas are thinking about hard use: oilfield shifts outside Odessa, processing game at a lease outside Junction, or daily carry under a tucked pearl snap in Dallas. This Italian-style stiletto switchblade runs a little different. Same automatic attitude, different role.

The 3.25-inch single-edge kriss blade folds into a 5-inch body, giving you a full 8.75 inches opened. It’s slim, polished, and pointed—made for clean, confident pierces and light slicing, not prying up barn tin. The kriss-style wave along the edge catches the light when it opens, throwing a little drama in a world of flat, black tactical blades.

If you’re building out a Texas OTF knife collection, this one sits in the case as your nod to old-world swagger: an automatic that looks like backroom stories and late-night walks, not field dressing and feed store runs.

How This Automatic Stiletto Works in Real Texas Carry

In the hand, the polished ivory-colored scales feel smooth but not slick, framed by steel bolsters that give your fingers a clear index point. You don’t get a pocket clip here. That’s by design. This knife was made to disappear in a boot, ride flat in a blazer pocket on a Houston night, or rest in the padded tray of a pickup console sliding down I-35.

Press the round push-button and the blade fires out with that clean, spring-driven snap you expect from a proper automatic. No half-hearted crawl, no rattle. Just a straight, confident deployment. When you’re done cutting cord, tape, a loose clothing tag, or the wrapper off a new piece of gear, the front guard and pommel give you just enough control to close it safely and lock it back into that slim frame.

It’s the sort of blade an old Houston bartender might keep under the bar to open boxes and cut line, or a San Antonio musician might slide into a jacket pocket before walking home from a Riverwalk gig at two in the morning.

Texas Knife Law, Switchblades, and Where This Stiletto Fits

Texas knife law changed the way people buy automatics. For years, folks asked if a switchblade was something to hide. Now the bigger question is what blade length and style make sense for daily carry. Under current Texas law, switchblades and automatic knives like this are legal to own and carry, and a 3.25-inch blade keeps you well inside the line for most everyday settings that aren’t restricted by separate rules—like courthouses, secured airport areas, or certain school properties.

The built-in safety on this stiletto matters more than most buyers realize. Slide the safety switch on the handle and you lock the button, keeping the knife from firing open in a jeans pocket when you lean into a truck seat or drop down into a barstool. In a state where you may carry in and out of private businesses with their own house rules, that extra bit of control is worth having.

Reading Texas Knife Culture Into a Switchblade

Ask around a Panhandle gun show and you’ll hear it: most Texans want a blade that works first and looks good second. But there’s always that one knife in the case that’s there to start conversations. This ivory-handled stiletto fills that slot. It respects state law, runs a practical blade length, and still carries that forbidden-image history of the classic switchblade—without actually putting you on the wrong side of any statute.

Where a Classic Switchblade Belongs in a Texas Day

It might ride backup to a tougher work knife on the jobsite. It might be your primary blade if you mostly cut tape, twine, food wrappers, and the kind of light material you encounter at an office in Austin or a studio in Fort Worth. It may never see a deer lease. That’s fine. Not every Texan blade has to taste dust and blood. Some just need to show up, open fast, and disappear again.

Questions Texas Buyers Ask About Switchblade Knives

Are OTF knives legal to carry in Texas?

Under current Texas law, automatic knives and traditional switchblades are legal to own and carry for most adults, whether the blade opens by push-button, out-the-front action, or side-opening like this Italian-style stiletto. The key limits today center more on blade length and restricted locations than on mechanism. You still can’t walk through secured airport screening or certain government buildings with it, and local policies or posted signs from private businesses can add their own rules. But as a general everyday carry in your truck, pocket, or at home, an automatic like this is legal across the state.

Is this stiletto built for ranch work or city carry in Texas?

This one leans city and town. At 3.25 inches, the plain-edge spear-point blade will open feed bags, trim loose cord, and handle light tasks on a small spread outside New Braunfels, but it’s not the knife you pick to cut hay twine all afternoon or pry staples off fence posts. Where it shines is in a jacket pocket headed into a Houston lounge, sitting in the glove box between Dallas and Waco, or clipped into a boot when you’re walking a San Antonio side street after closing.

How does this switchblade compare to a Texas OTF knife for daily carry?

A true OTF knife Texas buyers reach for usually brings a thicker handle, more aggressive grip, and often a double-action mechanism ready for heavy use. This stiletto is slimmer, more formal, and rides easier in dress clothes. If you want a rough-duty work partner, look at a purpose-built OTF. If you want something that opens fast, looks sharp, and fits a night out as well as a glove box in Lubbock, this Italian-style automatic holds its own.

Old-World Steel in a Modern Texas Evening

End of the night, wind blowing down a near-empty street in Laredo or Wichita Falls. You step out of a bar, feel that slight shift in the air that makes you more aware of your surroundings. Your hand settles on the ivory scales in your pocket. You know the feel of the button, the way the blade leaps out and locks solid, the way polished steel and kriss edge catch a hint of streetlight.

You may never need more than its easy cut on a loose thread, a stubborn package, or a bundle of zip ties in the back of the truck. But you carry it anyway—because in a state where the law finally caught up with the way people actually live, a clean, legal automatic with a bit of old-country drama fits right in.

Blade Length (inches) 3.25
Overall Length (inches) 8.75
Closed Length (inches) 5
Blade Color Silver
Blade Finish Polished
Blade Style Spear Point
Blade Edge Plain
Blade Material Steel
Handle Finish Polished
Handle Material Ivory
Button Type Push Button
Theme Stiletto
Safety Safety Switch
Pocket Clip No